The UK did devalue last year. They also tried the money helicopter. Now they have to make genuine structural changes. There are no silver bullets. If your economy's broken it eventually has to be fixed. The problem is nobody, anywhere - this isn't an Irish thing - nobody likes taking the hard decisions.
Personally I'm more optimistic now. Not because we're sorted anything, but because there's a greater acceptance of how deep we are.
I wouldn't go as far as acceptance, but there is certainly less denial. And you are right, the reason the hard and right decisions are not being made is because they are politically unpopular and involve a lot of sacrifice.
Countries like Germany, which have very high personal & corporate taxation, and a high national debt, have no means of raising extra money - not a good position to be in.
But Germany is not trying to increase its taxation it is doing the opposite, and at the same time reducing the size of government. The reason Germany is and will continue to do well is because they are focusing on production while at the same time spending less, at private and public level.
While Ireland has the right idea that spending has to be reduced it is making the fatal mistake of increasing taxation and levels of debt. Taxation is a burden to productivity, which is the only thing that will bring this country out of this mess.
This was one of the major stumbling blocks to the creation of a strong federal government in the fledgling United States. The second constitutional congress was made up of two major philosophical blocks; those who wanted a loose confederation of agrarian based states, sort of a utopian puritan land owning model, and those who wanted to embrace a more capitalist system that acknowledges the power of the money men in places like Boston and Philadelphia and wanted a stronger central government. The former was generally favoured by the southern states and the latter by the northern states. In the end those at the convention with international experience and a more worldly view won the day. They realised that a relatively strong central government with taxation powers was necessary to defend the cohesiveness of the Union.
In the lines quoted above Jefferson was arguing in favour of the establishment of a central bank (or more specifically the establishment of governmental mechanisms to control the state’s finances). Interestingly Jefferson was US ambassador (or Minister) to France while the second constitutional convention was taking place though he did strongly influence James Madison (known as the father of the US constitution) by sending him many letters and hundreds of books during the nearly six month convention he did not actually attend. Jefferson was heavily influenced by the French Philosopher Rousseau who first articulated the notion that governments derive their power from the people, not a divinely anointed monarch. Rousseau was very suspicious of banks and money men (he dies penniless and was an abject failure in every other aspect of his life).
You have some great knowledge of early US history, it's a fascinating topic. What I like most about the process that lead to the constitution is that it was written with the intent to limit the power of government while specifying what it should do.
But in regards to Jefferson being in favour of central banking I believe you are very mistaken. Jefferson was very opposed to a central control of the coinage, and believed it to not be constitutional. The US constitution specifically states that only gold and silver should be money, and in such a case there is no need to have it centrally controlled. Here is a more accurate version of the quote:
"The central bank is an institution of the most deadly hostility existing against the Principles and form of our Constitution. I am an Enemy to all banks discounting bills or notes for anything but Coin. If the American People allow private banks to control the issuance of their currency, first by inflation and then by deflation, the banks and corporations that will grow up around them will deprive the People of all their Property until their Children will wake up homeless on the continent their Fathers conquered."
I've only read parts of Nock's book "Jefferson"(
http://mises.org/books/jefferson.pdf), but it focuses a lot on the fact that Jefferson was very opposed to centralized government and control.
That's a bit harsh; money is just a tool, a means to an end. Anyone who judges success in the basis of monitory value is a pretty shallow person.
This is a very good point that is generally misunderstood or misrepresented. Money is not wealth, it is only a means of making transactions easier. Wealth is what we are able to buy with money. If our money buys a lot of products and services, i.e. the currency is strong, then we have more wealth. Higher prices are loss of wealth, lower prices are increased wealth.